Smoke billowed from the roof of Dodger Stadium tonight, but it didn’t seem to bother Greg Dobbs and the Marlins.

While Los Angeles firefighters battled a small warehouse blaze in an isolated area, Dobbs went 3-for-4 with 2 RBI to lead the Marlins to a 6-1 win over the Dodgers.

“I could smell that smoke and I was like, ‘That ain’t a hot-dog stand.’ Then I saw this huge puff and I said, ‘Oh, my God, this place is on fire and we’re still playing,”’ center fielder Chris Coghlan said.

“Then they made an announcement — I thought it was the movies — ‘Attention everybody, the place is on fire. Please do not panic. We have it under control.’ I thought everybody was just going to bum-rush leave. I thought it was pretty funny.

“I don’t know how many stadiums could say that and continue playing. When you got in the batter’s box, you had to clear your eyes. It was smokey the whole way.”

Reliever Brian Sanches made his first major league start and allowed one run in three innings.

“I tried to make like it was a normal relief appearance, I was just starting in the first inning,” he said.

Edward Mujica followed and earned the win with four strikeouts over two scoreless innings. Mujica leads the entire staff with five wins — more than Josh Johnson, Ricky Nolasco or Anibal Sanchez.

“Winning 6-1 on a bullpen day, that has to feel good,” manager Edwin Rodriguez said.

“That’s what good teams do — everybody is doing their job.”

Dobbs had his second straight 3-for-4, 2-RBI night.

Coghlan had three hits. Gaby Sanchez and Brett Hayes each had two hits, and pinch-hitter Wes Helms delivered a two-run double in the sixth inning.

Before the game, Rodriguez said it was time for Coghlan and Ramirez — Florida’s one and two hitters — to start producing.

“We need their offense,” Rodriguez said.

“Coghlan has been very, very inconsistent sometimes. One game he shows up and he looks like the best hitter on the field, and then two or three games he is struggling. To take this team to the next level, those two guys have to show more offense.”

Ramirez went 1-for-4.

The fire erupted in the fifth inning, causing players and fans to look up toward the roof behind first base. Early reports had no injuries, with fans in the area evacuated.

“I smelled that for six innings,” Rodriguez said. “It smlled like an electrical (fire).”

There was a scary moment in the eighth inning when Ramirez broke his bat on a swing — and the business end went twirling into the third-base stands.

[…] From the Palm Beach Post: “I could smell that smoke and I was like, ‘That ain’t a hot-dog stand.’ Then I saw this huge puff and I said, ‘Oh, my God, this place is on fire and we’re still playing,’ ” [he] said. […]

[…] From the Palm Beach Post: "I could smell that smoke and I was like, ‘That ain’t a hot-dog stand.’ Then I saw this huge puff and I said, ‘Oh, my God, this place is on fire and we’re still playing,’ " [he] said. […]